Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Compare text file and a folder Post 302654027 by pankaj_tarale on Monday 11th of June 2012 07:12:42 AM
Old 06-11-2012
Hi,

ls | rm `grep -xFf file.txt` will works with deletions too.

Here x stand for exact match from file , f for input from file and F with Fixed string separated by new line.

-Pankaj
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

grep multiple text files in folder into 1 text file?

How do I use the grep command to take mutiple text files in a folder and make one huge text file out of them. I'm using Mac OS X and can not find a text tool that does it so I figured I'd resort to the BSD Unix CLI for a solution... there are 5,300 files that I want to write to one huge file so... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: coppertone
7 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

How to compare the difference between a file and a folder??

Hi, I have a .txt file which has to be compared with a folder and print the difference to some other .txt file. I did try with the diff command..i mean diff /tmp/aaa/bbb.txt /space/aaa/bbb/ /***bbb.txt contains all the files names which may or may not exist in the folder bbb..so i need... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kumarsaravana_s
2 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Find all text files in folder and then copy to a new folder

Hi all, *I use Uwin and Cygwin emulator. I´m trying to search for all text files in the current folder (C/Files) and its sub folders using find -depth -name "*.txt" The above command worked for me, but now I would like to copy all found text files to a new folder (C/Files/Text) with ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: cgkmal
4 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

compare text in log file

Hi all, I am posting the thread similar to previous posts but here my scenario is i need to know what the files size from start date. Here end time file size will be 0. Also need to know how much time does it took to complete in seconds. log file: Name1 START 11:36:45 ... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Olivia
5 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Compare and merging the differences in text file

Hi i have gone through some sdiff command it shows the differences side by side and its really awesome file 1: this tool is for checking the differ merging with flower pots documentation file 2: this t ool is for checking the differ mergin g with flower pots documentation ... (27 Replies)
Discussion started by: rakeshkumar
27 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Compare filename to file folder

Hi. I have a problem, could you help me ? Situation: there are alot of files in directory_1, with the names like "notneeded1blabla.bla", "notveryneededblabla.gla". there is directory_2 that has directories with names like that: "bla_needed1", "blab_veryneeded". What i need so much is to place... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: sw_and
7 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Compare files in a folder based on another file

I have a file named file.txt that looks as follows //class1.txt 45 234 67 89 90 //class2.txt 456 34 78 89 120 class1 and class2.txt are the names of files in a folder named folder1. The content of class1.txt file in folder1 67 9 89 5 234 9The content of class2.txt file in... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jaff rufus
1 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Compare 2 text file with 1 column in each file and write mismatch data to 3rd file

Hi, I need to compare 2 text files with around 60000 rows and 1 column. I need to compare these and write the mismatch data to 3rd file. File1 - file2 = file3 wc -l file1.txt 58112 wc -l file2.txt 55260 head -5 file1.txt 101214200123 101214700300 101250030067 101214100500... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: Divya Nochiyil
10 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Compare Values in a Delimited Text file

Hi, How do I compare two columns within a text file If 2nd column values are same then I want to know 3rd column number matches or not Example: Prod Stag1 1234.79 Prod Stag2 1234.79 20 Prod Stag3 1234.79 30 Prod Stag4 1234.79 UAT Stag1 1243.56 UAT Stag2 1243.56 20 UAT ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: krux_rap
3 Replies

10. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Create new folder and text file the same time in one line

Is it possible to create new folder and write a new text file in the folder while the current position is outside the new folder? in one line mkdir folder | echo "hello test"> folder/test.txt not work. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: cmdcmd
1 Replies
ARCH(1) 						    BSD General Commands Manual 						   ARCH(1)

NAME
arch -- print architecture type or run selected architecture of a universal binary SYNOPSIS
arch arch [-32] [-64] [[-arch_name | -arch arch_name]...] [-c] [-d envname]... [-e envname=value]... [-h] prog [args ...] DESCRIPTION
The arch command with no arguments, displays the machine's architecture type. The other use of the arch command it to run a selected architecture of a universal binary. A universal binary contains code that can run on different architectures. By default, the operating system will select the architecture that most closely matches the processor type. This means that an intel architecture is selected on intel processors and a powerpc architecture is selected on powerpc processors. A 64-bit architecture is preferred over a 32-bit architecture on a 64-bit processor, while only 32-bit architectures can run on a 32-bit processor. When the most natural architecture is unavailable, the operating system will try to pick another architecture. On 64-bit processors, a 32-bit architecture is tried. If this is also unavailable, the operating system on an intel processor will try running a 32-bit powerpc architecture. Otherwise, no architecture is run, and an error results. The arch command can be used to alter the operating system's normal selection order. The most common use is to select the 32-bit architec- ture on a 64-bit processor, even if a 64-bit architecture is available. The arch_name argument must be one of the currently supported architectures: i386 32-bit intel x86_64 64-bit intel Either prefix the architecture with a hyphen, or (for compatibility with other commands), use -arch followed by the architecture. If more than one architecture is specified, the operating system will try each one in order, skipping an architecture that is not supported on the current processor, or is unavailable in the universal binary. The other options are: -32 Add the native 32-bit architecture to the list of architectures. -64 Add the native 64-bit architecture to the list of architectures. -c Clears the environment that will be passed to the command to be run. -d envname Deletes the named environment variable from the environment that will be passed to the command to be run. -e envname=value Assigns the given value to the named environment variable in the environment that will be passed to the command to be run. Any existing environment variable with the same name will be replaced. -h Prints a usage message and exits. The prog argument is the command to run, followed by any arguments to pass to the command. It can be a full or partial path, while a lone name will be looked up in the user's command search path. If no architectures are specified on the command line, the arch command takes the basename of the prog argument and searches for the first property list file with that basename and the .plist suffix, in the archSettings sub-directory in each of the standard domains, in the fol- lowing order: ~/Library/archSettings User settings /Library/archSettings Local settings /Network/Library/archSettings Network settings /System/Library/archSettings System settings This property list contains the architecture order preferences, as well as the full path to the real executable. For examples of the prop- erty list format, look at the files in /System/Library/archSettings. Example On an intel processor: % perl -MConfig -e 'printf "%s ", $Config{byteorder}' 1234 shows the intel little endian byte order. Making links to the arch command When a link is made to arch command with a different name, that name is used to find the corresponding property list file. Thus, other com- mands can be wrapped so that they have custom architecture selection order. Because of some internal logic in the code, hard links to the arch command may not work quite right. It is best to avoid using hard links, and only use symbolic links to the arch command. Environment The environment variable ARCHPREFERENCE can be used to provide architecture order preferences. It is checked before looking for the corre- sponding property list file. The value of the environment variable ARCHPREFERENCE is composed of one or more specifiers, separated by semicolons. A specifier is made up of one, two or three fields, separated by colons. Architectures specified in order, are separated by commas and make up the last (mandatory) field. The first field, if specified, is a name of a program, which selects this specifier if that name matches the program name in ques- tion. If the name field is empty or there is no name field, the specifier matches any program name. Thus, ordering of specifiers is impor- tant, and the one with no name should be last. When the arch command is called directly, the prog name provides the path information to the executable (possibly via the command search path). When a name is specified in a ARCHPREFERENCE specifier, the path information can alternately be specified as a second field following the name. When the arch command is called indirectly via a link, this path information must be specified. If not specified as a second field in a specifier, the executable path will be looked up in the corresponding property list file. Example ARCHPREFERENCE Values i386,x86_64 A specifier that matches any name. foo:i386,x86_64 A specifier that matches the program named foo (the full executable path is in the foo.plist file). foo:/op/bin/boo:i386,x86_64 A specifier with all fields specified. baz:i386;x86_64 A specifier for baz and a second specifier that would match any other name. BUGS
Running the arch command on an interpreter script may not work if the interpreter is a link to the arch command, especially if a 64-bit architecture is specified (since the arch command is 2-way universal, 32-bit only). SEE ALSO
machine(1) Mac OS X July 8, 2010 Mac OS X
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:58 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy